Show - 1 I GE The llt play presented Omar Oliveira appears on anniversary of death with Utah Symphony - f Elmer Oliveira will again visit the Utah Symphony this week performing the Benjamin Lees Violin Concerto Music director Joseph Silverstein will conduct the program - 1 t 1 Which also features Brahms' Symphony No 2 and Haydn's Symphony No 91 Oliveira began his violin studies at aga 2 taught by his older brother John on an instrument made by their father When he was 16 Leonard Bernstein chose him to solo with the New York Philharmonic in the Young People's Concert Series In 1975 Oliveira won the Walter Naumburg Competition and the GB Dealey Award He is the only American violinist to capture the gold medal in the Tchaikovsky Competition Winning in 1978 He also was a 1983 winner of the Avery Fisher Prize His 1988 recording of the Barber Violin Concerto with Leonard Slatkin and the St Louis Symphony was nominated for a Grammy A popular soloist with the Utah Symphony he scheduled to premiere Joan Tower's Violin Concerto with the or:chestra next season y al Tickets for the 8 pm concerts and Saturday in Symphony Hall 123 W South Temple range from 610 to $25 with $5 student tickets Tickets for a "Finishing Touches" open dress rehearsal Thursday at 11 am in Symphony Hall are $5 refreshments will be served in the lobby starting at 10:15 am : The program will also be in Brigham Young de Jong Concert Hall Harris Fine Arts Center Thursday at 7:30 are 610 for the public 'pm Tickets BYU identification and $8 with Fri-:da- i 1 per-:form- The department host composer Benjamin Lees for a free seminar "The Composer as a :Surrealist" Thursday at 2 pm in Ewill BYU music t 400 in the Harris Center Violist Roberta Zalkind and Marjorie Janove will open the fourth season of the Kol Ami Concert Series at Congregation Kol Ami 2425 E Heritage Way (2760 South) Tuesday at 8 pm On the program are Bach's Unaccompanied Suite for Viola No 3 Hammel's Fantasy Stravinsky's "Elegy" and Hinde'mith's Viola Sonata Op 11 No 4 Tickets are 67 general admission and 64 for students and seniors Call the synagogue for information Ronald Wooden voice and saxolphone and Paul Joines cello will 'present a free faculty recital at 7:30 pm Monday in the Allred Theatre at Weber State College Carol Hurst will be at the piano On the program are works of Brahms Bach Purcell Mozart Kodaly and Bazelaire The University of Utah chamber orchestras will present their free fall concert Tuesday at 8 pm in Room 200 of David Gardner Hall The pro gram features soprano soloist Anne Riggio a master's candidate in voice performance and Utah Symphony trumpeter Edward Gomik a U of U faculty member The University Chamber Orchestra will perform works of Grieg and Mozart and the 1990-9- 1 Mount Olympus Waters String Quartet will make its debut with a Beethoven quartet e BYU Men's The Chorus under the direction of Mack Wilberg will perform Tuesday at 7:30 pm in the de Jong Concert Hall Tickets are $4 for the public and $3 with BYU identification Flute Choir BYU's will perform a free concert Tuesday at 7:30 pm in the Madsen Recital Hall Harris Center : More than 200 former students of Roene Di Fiore will honor the late Dixie College music instructor with a free program under the direction of Ernie Doose Tuesday at 8 pm in Symphony Hall 123 W South Temple The Dixie College National Advisory Council will host a reception In the hall at 7 pm The Salt Lake City chapter of the American Guild of Organists will hold its November meeting at Summerhays Music 5450 Green St 5 at 5300 South) at 7:30 pm Tuesday puild members will present a favorite prelude postlude or Christmas selection The public is invited The Utah State University Symphony Orchestra under the direction of James McWhorter will offer its first concereof the season Wednesday at 8 pm in the Kent COncert Hall on the Logan campus Bill Stanley one of the winners from USU's competition and a USU senior majoring in piano will perform the first two movements of Prokofiev's Piano : pia-mi- st 160-voic- I t I il 1 I Ifi Sunday November 11 1990 Salt Lake Tribune 198G-conce- No 2 Concerto 4 '' ' '' " : ' ' ''' 1 fir : ' '? r4 ?'" :4 k e V1 t 4 ''' ' IA e 2 iv z ' I 401 1-- ' 1 - '1 :low evoti L r I - : z 109 ooei - - - ' Elmar Oliveira Solos with Symphony Tickets available at the door are $4 for adults and $2 for USU students and youth Jennifer O'Haley vocal director of City Rep will present a concert of classical Broadway and movie music Thursday at 7:30 pm at the Utah Theatre 148 S Main Reserved seating is $850 for adults $650 for children 16 and under and is available at the City Rep box office BYU organ-facult- y members Parley Be !nap and Richard Elliott will perform the works of French composer and organist Cesar Franck Thursday at 7:30 pm in the Provo Tabernacle 100 S University Ave Admission is free The Tolstik family professional musicians who have emigrated from the Soviet Union in the last two years will perform Friday at 7:30 pm at the Diane Orton home 991 Sunburst Lane Alpine Tickets are $5 and available at the door For more information contact Jay L Beck in Salt Lake City The Temple Square Concert Series continues with free performances at 7:30 pm in the Assembly Hall Friday the American West Symphony and Chorus led by Terrell Lamoreaux will present an evening of Russian music including that of Rachmaninoff Tchaikovsky and Glazunov Utah Symphony violinist Judd Sheranian will solo in the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto The symphony and chorus recently returned from a tour of Scandinavia Saturday violinists Jason Swigert 14 and Bryan Hernandez 13 and pianists Susan Duehlmeier and Bonnie Gritton will join the Westminster Chamber Orchestra conducted by Jeff Manookian in music of Vivaldi Schubert Mozart and Casella The BYU Symphonic Band will give a free concert Friday at 7:30 pm in the de Jong Concert Hall The program under the direction of Don Peterson will feature music by Saint-Saen- s Lloyd Webber and others The BYU Trombone Choir Brass Choir and Percussion Ensemble will combine for a free concert Saturday at 7:30 pm in the de Jong Concert Hall Violinist Ashot Abramyan of the Utah Symphony will give a free recital at Westminster College's Nunemaker Place 1840 S 13th East Nov 18 at 3 pm He will be accompanied by pianist Jeff Manookian The eighth annual free Suzuki Harp Recital will be presented in the Capitol Rotunda at 4 pm Nov 18 Sixty harp students of ShruDeLi Ownbey will perform music of Debussy Haydn Dussek Seized() and Challon The students range from age 4 to adult and the instruments folk range from small harps to small pedal harps to concert grand harps Limited seating is available but patrons may wish to bring their own folding chairs Please do not bring babies or children too young to sit quietly for an hour Trumpeter Daniel Rich an adjunct professor of trumpet at Weber State College will be featured as the Weber State Symphony Orchestra's Sunday Symphony Series begins Nov 18 at 7:30 pm in the campus's Austad Auditorium Admission is $2 for adults $1 for students and seniors — Catherine Reese non-ped- al items and audition Wednesday before please include the appears in the telenot Inbune does publish phone phone book the numbers The Tribune will run calendar notices received by noon of the pubitcation On audition notices nome of a contact person as it (pronounced shrine) said Stavis' fictionalized account takes the same position: that Hill who was convicted on circumstantial evidence was innocent "The play is definitely black and white in its view" said Scharine "but we hope our production creates some gray areas Stavis is consumed with the idea of freedom for the Scharine a member of the University of Utah theater faculty said "The Man Who Never Died" art exhibits will open the exthis week "Nutcrackers hibit" featuring nutcrackers made I R 1 2 I i I 1 1 975-020566-143- - '11 SLC Helper 292-790- CASINO w 1 e 4r 447 44'‘ N f—''Itk — ---': -- ::' -- -- i ' 4 Stilsig ' 1 ' '' 1 - g f '14 P 41 It i -1 : i 1 - t t ai 7 '176 Igt ' t '11:' 4 i I i tk - IIA' sr tr-- 4' r c I 's ' ii f ' t k'cf 1 1 i 1 L 4 It I 114 j't t' ' it 4 ': 4 - e —tribune Staff Photo by Steve Griffin From upper left Robin Youngberg is Joe Hill with Angel Hays as woman he loves Marcel Lundberg who betrays him laney the labor spy who betrays Hill Mark Adams Gary Ellenberger and Marcel Lundberg portray a variety of characters Tickets are $5 or 83 for seniors students and union mem- the ideal that has surrounded the man known as Joe Hill Cast members for the local production produced by Nan Weber include Robin Youngberg a third-yea- r U of U law student of Swedish descent Others featured are Krista Grimmett and Jared Neumeier as Hill's IWW comrades Angel Hays as the woman Hill loves and Matthew Mul bers The College of Eastern Utah Price will also present "The Man Who Never Died" Nov 29 ' through Dec e teati hir e rikatri -- It - 0 d 1 0 I i i What could be more fun than staying at I2ughlin's newest and biggest riverfront hotel? 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N ) : 4 40 - I' award-winnin- 373-032- Donna's Tours 2 1 3 ' J I ilt" lit14 p - - 0 1965-1990- - Lake Shore Motor Coach Line 1 SLC 7 Provo 1 A Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art Examples of her woodcut prints will be on exhibition at the museum through Dec 21 An exhibit entitled "Joe Hill" featuring 20 photographs by the late Pablo O'Higgins depicting the life and times of labor leader Joe Hill opens Tuesday at the Union Gallery Olpin Union University of Utah The show runs through Nov 24 4 - ' ' 328-336- 649-342- ' ::' I ': s Joe Hill Scharine said was the pen name of a person born in Sweden as Joel Heggelund who came to the United States in 1902 and was tried and convicted in Utah as Joseph Hillstrom He was a poet cartoonist and songwriter whose work first appeared in a little red book Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent printed by the 1WW or ' 'Wobblies" as they were known Hillstrom worked as a farmer miner deckhand and musician and in 1909 joined the San Pedro Calif local of the IIVIV while working as a longshoreman He wrote his first song "Casey Jones — the Union Scab" as a result of a strike by laborers working for the Southern Pacific Railway Line "There are really two figures that come from this story" said Scharine "Joe Hill the labor martyr and Joe Hillstrom the person convicted of the crime" The production with musical direction by Paul Boruff features many of Hill's songs and presents Hill as a joyous man who tried to keep people from becoming violent Scharine says the play doesn't glorify a murderer but rather tries to embody the myth A I ' loofsiTiothe by local artists opens at the Salt Lake Art Center 20 S West Temple Friday with a reception from 7 to 9 pm The show runs through Dec 24 "Noel Noel" featuring works by 78 local artists will be on display at the BountifulDavis Art Center 2175 S Main Bountiful Nov 18 through Jan 2 An opening reception will be Nov 18 from 2 to 5 pm A preview soiree is scheduled Saturday at 6 pm Reservations are required by Tuesday Cost is $20 — "Art Barn Artists: Retrospec- 'i f" an exhibit curated tive by artist David Sweet will open with a reception on Friday from 6 to 9 pm at the Finch Lane Gallery 54 Finch I IttIC:10102 tig:viA L: Lane at Reservoir Park The show A : g1)114k Of the second half of a retrospective features works of artists who had $1000 CASH BACK! shows at the Art Barn during that 25- year period LIEVAIDACCROSSING The exhibit runs through Dec 23 "Familiar Scenes" an exhibit of : 0tot Oti ion paintings and drawings by Jeri Parker is Thursday from 4 to 9 pm VII at the Carriage House 956 Browning r why Ave '1 g 4111 Ilituttiles 4 Parker is as an i writer of poetry and short stories jott! :(019 Her book Uneasy Survivors: Five 111 "4"-: Zr' ifli Women Writers has been used as a :0 ItO ' fillt text of Aftar four years college iI it I 1) study with Le Conte Stewart Parker ii : littattegtrt fientA--A returned to the University of Utah to add a painting degree to her master's ' t01' ':at 14 i in English She creates mostly representational paintings of still lifes and WENOOVER ROOM RESERVATIONS landscapes '( 03:): Artist and educator Karen Kunc will be on the Utah State University fklret '' campus Logan Monday and TuesSeas Artist of the Visiting part day E ries in the department of art Her 0 tt && t '° visit is part of the ongoing program "Acculturation of the Landscape" - 1 - : A reception and gallery talk are planned for Tuesday 2 pm in the Two holiday - Bus tours for groups or individuals to The State Line and Silver Smith Casinos Call for rates and pick-u- p locations Casino Caravans : Art notes: Holiday s hibits retrospective ready to open - 1 ' - : '7: '''' Boy! 0 1 c individual" J 1 ' poignancy" Director Richard Scharine ' 1 shoasciatihoercetrz Htioilln'fsohris'atnoeryw ii 7 -- is a play of the American dream "The tyranny of Joe Hill's time against which it argues also reflects the struggle against McCarthyism in the time it was written "In an era where political pressure attempts to dictate what artists can and cannot do the play remains painfully relevant today Nor in a time when communism has failed worldwide and capitalism has produced the largest gap between Lich and poor in our na- - By Nancy Melich Tribune Theater Writer A '50s play concerning the life of labor organizer Joe Hill will be presented almost to the date of the 75th anniversary of Hill's execution Barrie Stavis' drama "The Man Who Never Died" may be seen Wednesday through Nov 18 at 7:30 pm at the Communications Workers of America Labor Hall 939 Edison (939 S 149 East) On Jam 10 1914 two masked gunmen entered a grocery store and shot and killed the owner (an and his son Hill was arrested and tried for the murder and was executed Nov 19 1915 by a firing squad at the old Utah State Prison (located in what is now Sugarhouse Park) The local production is sponsored by the Joe Hill Organizing Committee The drama which opened Nov 21 1958 with Mark Gordon as Joe Hill was described by author Edwin J Bronnet in The Encyclopedia of the American Theatre as a play dealing with "Joe Hill the celebrated IWW International Workers of the World labor leader who was executed in 1915 for a murder he did not commit" - 000 reservations )atelne CASINO CONVENTION CENTER |